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Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 17 Aug, 2020 8:31 pm
by Eremophila
When walking solo, I like to carry a small permanent black marker and/or a small notepad and pencil.

Notepad doubles as a trip journal on multi day walks. Can also fill out one page with emergency contact & medical details.

Black marker - if no notepad - if you are alone & bitten, circle the bite area prior to bandaging. Write a note on your skin. Type of snake, time bitten.... at worst you could lapse into unconsciousness and anyone who finds you won’t have a clue what’s wrong.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 17 Aug, 2020 9:09 pm
by north-north-west
Tortoise wrote:
north-north-west wrote:It takes time for the toxins to move through the system, and a brief low level of activity is not going to hasten the process dramatically. Splint and bandage as soon as you've called for help[ (phone/PLB).

I agree for sure with the bandaging and splinting. I would do that first, though, then call for help (at least putting on the compression bandage). Is anyone here experienced in remote first aid?

My first aid training is woefully out of date, but I'm working on two things:
a) Quickest job first; that means the PLB.
b) It may have changed but I've heard on a number of occasions that the best chance of survival for serious medical issues is to get proper medical assistance ASAP. So, again, PLB first.

That's just my take and my reasoning. Never had to put it into practice and hope I never will.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 17 Aug, 2020 9:25 pm
by Tortoise
I'm working on two things:
a) Quickest job first; that means the PLB.
b) It may have changed but I've heard on a number of occasions that the best chance of survival for serious medical issues is to get proper medical assistance ASAP. So, again, PLB first.

I was working from the point of view of applying the pressure ASAP to dramatically slow the spread of the (potentially injected) venom. I reckon more time would be bought than spent. But like I said, I wasn't sure. Thanks for your perspective, slparker. Especially since you agree with me.:D Seriously, I do appreciate your experience.

And as we all say, the chances are miniscule. But it's good to have thought about it ahead of time. Now that I think about it, I do know someone who was bitten when bushwalking in Tassie this year. The 3 doctors (give or take one) with him apparently decided on first aid and observation rather than evacuation. The bitee was fine, but I reckon I'd push the button anyway.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 17 Aug, 2020 9:41 pm
by Neo
A bandage with pressure indicating squares is a great help.
Otherwise and also stay still and hit the PLB.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 1:06 pm
by skibug
Eremophila wrote:

When walking solo, I like to carry a small permanent black marker and/or a small notepad and pencil.

Notepad doubles as a trip journal on multi day walks. Can also fill out one page with emergency contact & medical details.

Black marker - if no notepad - if you are alone & bitten, circle the bite area prior to bandaging. Write a note on your skin. Type of snake, time bitten.... at worst you could lapse into unconsciousness and anyone who finds you won’t have a clue what’s wrong.


My understanding is that, should you be evacuated to hospital, if the compression bandage seems to be doing its job (ie keeping symptoms under control, preventing venom spread (blood/lymphatic fluid tests), it stays in place - as removing it, even only briefly, may result in catastrophic release of venom from the limb/bite site. To access a venom sample, a small hole is cut in the bandage - so information written under the bandage may not be seen. Mark the snake bite site on the outside of the bandage.

"I'm working on two things:
a) Quickest job first; that means the PLB.
b) It may have changed but I've heard on a number of occasions that the best chance of survival for serious medical issues is to get proper medical assistance ASAP. So, again, PLB first."

If it's me, my procedure would be - 1. down on the ground, mininise all movement and reduce blood flow/heart rate/respiratory rate, find calmness, think. 2. Pressure bandage, splint, then 3. PLB/phone/send for help. By bandaging first, you are potentially buying hours or days of time before requiring medical intervention - the five or ten minutes taken will not make a huge difference in the long run if you've trapped the venom. On the other hand, the extra five minutes or so accessing and setting off the PLB could bring forward serious medical events by hours. Happy to be corrected.

Skibug

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 3:38 pm
by north-north-west
Given where I carry my PLB it would take a minute at most of very limited physical activity.
Note, I am not advocating for anyone to follow my procedure, just explaining it and the rationale behind it.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 3:43 pm
by Neo
Good ideas.
A snake bandage and PLB could be kept together with a good rubberband. Do both at once.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 3:57 pm
by crollsurf
I don't bother in autumn or winter but Spring and Summer always. Should carry 2 bandages but dont. A PLB always. Snakes in Spring seem to be full on agro and have chased after me on more than one occasion. Crikey

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Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 4:31 pm
by Lamont
crollsurf wrote:I don't bother in autumn or winter but Spring and Summer always. Should carry 2 bandages but dont. A PLB always. Snakes in Spring seem to be full on agro and have chased after me on more than one occasion. Crikey

Sent from my SM-G965F using Tapatalk

I'm guessing Eastern Brown and/or Tiger?

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 4:41 pm
by crollsurf
Tigers for sure. Extra angry when interrupting them while mating. Amazing to watch them standing up and intertwined but once spotted, I'm thinking there's an ambush going down and I'm the prey!

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Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 5:28 pm
by Eremophila
skibug wrote:My understanding is that, should you be evacuated to hospital, if the compression bandage seems to be doing its job (ie keeping symptoms under control, preventing venom spread (blood/lymphatic fluid tests), it stays in place - as removing it, even only briefly, may result in catastrophic release of venom from the limb/bite site. To access a venom sample, a small hole is cut in the bandage - so information written under the bandage may not be seen. Mark the snake bite site on the outside of the bandage.


Just to clarify - it's more in case you lose consciousness before being able to apply the bandage. Obviously these items should be kept with the bandage.

By writing a note on your skin, I don't mean at the site of the bite - just somewhere else that's visible.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 6:10 pm
by Warin
If a bandage is not doing its job ... put another bandage over the top. Quick and easy.

If it restricting circulation that is another matter.

For a snake bike - two dots on the outside of the bandage at the site of the bite. This should be visible to the next responder. No need to mark the skin.

Record the time of the bite, probably on the bandage near the bite sight - KISS. This keeps the info at the bite site which is what they will be looking for.

--------------
PLB or bandage first?
For me it is what is to hand first.
Check I have been bitten and now out of harms way - don't want a second bite.
Pack off and deep breath to relax. Think where are my PLB and bandages - if possible lie down now.
Get them out, if the PLB comes first then I'd activate it - less than 30 seconds, don't hurry or panic.
If the bandages come first, check I have access to the PLB and then lie down and put on the bandages. Activate PLB, put marks on bandage and go to sleep (if possible).

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 19 Aug, 2020 8:14 pm
by highercountry
crollsurf wrote:Tigers for sure. Extra angry when interrupting them while mating. Amazing to watch them standing up and intertwined but once spotted, I'm thinking there's an ambush going down and I'm the prey!


The performance you've been lucky enough to see is actually 2 males wrestling for the right to mate with a nearby female.
So while you're standing there captivated by the display there's a female not far away ready to pounce for your throat. :D
Lots of other snake species do it too.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sun 23 Aug, 2020 9:18 am
by Overlandman
highercountry wrote:
crollsurf wrote:Tigers for sure. Extra angry when interrupting them while mating. Amazing to watch them standing up and intertwined but once spotted, I'm thinking there's an ambush going down and I'm the prey!


The performance you've been lucky enough to see is actually 2 males wrestling for the right to mate with a nearby female.
So while you're standing there captivated by the display there's a female not far away ready to pounce for your throat. :D
Lots of other snake species do it too.


Spot on highcountry
Have only witnessed it once with 3 Large males Intertwined on one of my many trips to Mt Chappell Island In Bass Strait.
3 of us caught 1 each, and when probed they were all males :D
Regards OLM

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Tue 02 Feb, 2021 4:37 pm
by Overlandman
From ABC

A 10-year-old Alice Springs girl is in a stable condition in ICU after she was bitten twice by a mulga snake in her bed last night.


https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-02-02/ ... l/13113314

Another one

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-02-02/ ... f/13110952

Advice from his mum and the quick actions of his mate saved a 16-year-old schoolboy bitten by a deadly brown snake at Cummins on South Australia's Eyre Peninsula during the school holidays.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sat 30 Oct, 2021 7:50 am
by Overlandman
That time of the year again
A young boy was bitten by a snake at St Hellens last month, he was flown to Launceston hospital by the rescue helicopter then transferred to Hobart hospital.
He survived, no further information on what type of snake bit he received the bite from.
Regards OLM

From ABC
Surviving Snake Bite
https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/202 ... /100406488

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sat 13 Nov, 2021 1:19 pm
by markg
Always have bandages in my pack, even if working around mums small farm doing fence repairs and other chores. Just got back from 5 days bush and saw about 5 browns and a copperhead. Moroka 30 make great snakeproff gaiters, easy to put on and comfortable.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sat 30 Apr, 2022 9:25 am
by Overlandman
One from ABC

A good rescue effort for a dry bite.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-29/ ... /101027146

When Megan Brouwer went hiking with her husband and five-year-old son in Karijini National Park she was concerned about spraining her ankle — instead she was bitten by a deadly snake.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sun 29 Jan, 2023 7:53 am
by Overlandman
From the Tasmanian Advocate
A man aged in his sixties has died after a suspected snake bite east of Brisbane.
It's believed a brown snake bit his hand at a private property at Kensington Grove just before 10am on Saturday.

The man was in a critical condition when paramedics arrived but he later died.
Police are not treating the death as suspicious and will prepare a report for the coroner.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sun 10 Sep, 2023 2:40 pm
by Overlandman
From ABC

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-10/ ... /102837214

A man in his 60s has died after being bitten by a suspected brown snake as he tried to uncoil it from his friend's leg near Mackay in northern Queensland.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 11 Sep, 2023 6:39 pm
by madpom
Out of interest: what does it take to make gaiters 'snakeproof'. Is there a specific gsm recommended for the canvas or what?

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 11 Sep, 2023 9:50 pm
by Scrambler
There's no hard evidence on gaiters: the science is with blue jeans and rattlesnakes.

The protection is that snakes bite as if what they can see is skin. They want to land the tips of their fangs under the skin so an air gap under heavy fabric around your ankles means that a bit over 1/2 the time they miss you and just kill the gaiters (or jeans). Assuming the rather Mythbusters scientific test holds up in the real world with Aussie snakes.

Thinking that through it would be mass (heavier) and resistance to penetration (a goldilocks number?) Remember that only one fabric- denim- has actual science so the rest is just guesswork.

The main thing is the air gap: don't go for skintight stretch gaiters for snake protection.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Mon 11 Sep, 2023 10:17 pm
by Overlandman
madpom wrote:Out of interest: what does it take to make gaiters 'snakeproof'. Is there a specific gsm recommended for the canvas or what?


Plenty of products on the market
Just don’t get bit above the gaiter

https://snakeprotex.com/

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Tue 12 Sep, 2023 7:03 am
by Scrambler
I'm not sure I completely trust a company that tells me their gaiters are scientifically tested for protection against "the world's most venomous creatures" but has actually tested against accidental needle exposure. Snakeprotex gaiters are really Needleprotex gaiters. And can be overcome with 2kg of force, per their web page (although they do say 20N).

Per my comment above, the only snakebite protection research is with denim, and it is the air gap that works not the difficulty of planting the fangs.

I don't know (because no-one has done research) whether a stiffer or a softer fabric works better than denim. If the snake IS trying to penetrate the skin, maybe it will just get a better grip and push harder if it doesn't get through. These factors would eliminate the air gap, so it is possible that harder-to-puncture fabrics would be less protective in the real world.

If you REALLY want "evidence based" protection, wear jeans.

The recent death highlights the evidence on snakebite deaths: it is the second person involved who is most likely to die. Snakes usually bite to chase people away. They bite to kill only if attacked. Of course "attacked" could mean accidentally stood on.

The second person is trying to catch and kill the snake- or in this recent case remove the snake from someone else. The warning worked on the first person, but the second needs to be stopped for the snake to survive: do or die. The snake will envenomate, with meaning.

All the advice to stop, back away has good real-world evidence. And is more protective than any gaiter.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Thu 14 Sep, 2023 9:32 am
by myrtlegirl
I've long held the theory that the venom has less chance of killing me than the fright of being bitten. The recent case in Qld where a bloke unwrapped a snake from someone's leg proves it.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-14/ ... /102854318

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Thu 14 Sep, 2023 4:17 pm
by Overlandman
Interesting
Thanks for the update Myrtlegirl

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Sun 17 Sep, 2023 10:09 am
by Overlandman
Interesting story on the First Taipan Antivenom

From ABC

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-17/ ... /102860834


Bruce Stringer was just 10 years old when his brush with death catapulted him into the medical history books.

It was November 1955 when, growing up in Cairns, young Bruce and his carefree school mates ran around without shoes, exploring the long grass and picturesque swimming holes.

Re: snake bite

PostPosted: Wed 20 Mar, 2024 11:17 am
by Overlandman
From ABC

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-20/ ... /103608784

Paramedics have confirmed the death of a man who suffered multiple snake bites in a North Queensland backyard.

Queensland Ambulance Services (QAS) were called to the suburb of Deeragun, one of Townsville's northernmost suburbs, on Tuesday afternoon after 3:00pm.

They found the man, 47, in cardiac arrest with multiple snake bites to his left arm.

Update

The ABC understands Jerromy Brookes, 47, was bitten after catching and bagging a snake at a childcare centre.

7 news said he was not a professional snake handler.
Rip :(

Update

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-21/ ... /103615538

No first aid after being bitten, drove himself home.
Snake was only 30cm long
Sad to read. OLM